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Nietzsche's Concept of the Will to Power

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The “will to power” is a central concept in the philosophy of 19th-century German


philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. It is best understood as an irrational force, found
in all individuals that can be channeled toward different ends. Nietzsche explored
the idea of the will to power throughout his career, categorizing it at various
points as a psychological, biological, or metaphysical principle. For this reason,
the will to power is also one of Nietzsche's most misunderstood ideas.
Origins of the Idea
In his early twenties, Nietzsche read "The World as Will and Representation" by
Arthur Schopenhauer and fell under its spell. Schopenhauer offered a deeply
pessimistic vision of life, and at the heart of it was his idea that a blind,
ceaselessly striving, irrational force he called “Will” constituted the dynamic
essence of the world. This cosmic Will manifests or expresses itself through each
individual in the form of the sexual drive and the “will to life” that can be seen
throughout nature. It is the source of much misery since it is essentially
insatiable. The best thing one can do to reduce one’s suffering is to find ways to
calm it. This is one of the functions of art.
In his first book, "The Birth of Tragedy," Nietzsche posits what he calls a
“Dionysian” impulse as the source of Greek tragedy. Like Schopenhauer’s Will, it
is an irrational force that surges up from dark origins, and it expresses itself in
wild drunken frenzies, sexual abandon, and festivals of cruelty. His later notion of
the will to power is significantly different, but it retains something of this idea of a
deep, pre-rational, unconscious force that can be harnessed and transformed in
order to create something beautiful.

The Will to Power as a Psychological Principle


In early works like "Human, All Too Human" and "Daybreak," Nietzsche devotes
much of his attention to psychology. He doesn’t talk explicitly about a “will to
power,” but time and again he explains aspects of human behavior in terms of a
desire for domination or mastery over others, oneself, or the environment. In
"The Gay Science" he begins to be more explicit, and in "Thus Spoke
Zarathustra" he begins to use the expression “will to power.”
People unacquainted with Nietzsche’s writings may be inclined to interpret the
idea of the will to power rather crudely. But Nietzsche is not thinking only or even
primarily of the motivations behind people like Napoleon or Hitler who expressly
seek military and political power. In fact, he typically applies the theory quite
subtly.
For instance, Aphorism 13 of "The Gay Science"  is entitled “The Theory of the
Sense of Power.” Here Nietzsche argues that we exercise power over other
people both by benefiting them and by hurting them. When we hurt them we
make them feel our power in a crude way—and also a dangerous way, since
they may seek to revenge themselves. Making someone indebted to us is usually
a preferable way to feel a sense of our power; we also thereby extend our power,
since those we benefit see the advantage of being on our side. Nietzsche, in fact,
argues that causing pain is generally less pleasant than showing kindness and
even suggests that cruelty, because it is the inferior option, is a sign that
one lacks power.
Nietzsche’s Value Judgments
The will to power as Nietzsche conceives of it is neither good nor bad. It is a
basic drive found in everyone, but one that expresses itself in many different
ways. The philosopher and the scientist direct their will to power into a will to
truth. Artists channel it into a will to create. Businessmen satisfy it through
becoming rich.
In "On the Genealogy of Morals," Nietzsche contrasts “master morality” and
“slave morality,” but traces both back to the will to power. Creating tables of
values, imposing them on people, and judging the world according to them, is
one noteworthy expression of the will to power. And this idea underlies Nietzsche
attempt to understand and evaluate moral systems. The strong, healthy, masterly
types confidently impose their values on the world directly. The weak, by
contrast, seek to impose their values in a more cunning, roundabout way, by
making the strong feel guilty about their health, strength, egotism, and pride.
So while the will to power in itself is neither good nor bad, Nietzsche very clearly
prefers some ways in which it expresses itself to others. He doesn’t advocate the
pursuit of power. Rather, he praises the sublimation of the will to power into
creative activity. Roughly speaking, he praises those expressions of it he views
as creative, beautiful, and life-affirming, and he criticizes expressions of the will
to power that he sees as ugly or born of weakness.
One particular form of the will to power that Nietzsche devotes much attention to
is what he calls “self-overcoming.” Here the will to power is harnessed and
directed toward self-mastery and self-transformation, guided by the principle that
“your real self lies not deep within you but high above you.”

The Will to Power as a Biological Principle


At times Nietzsche seems to posit the will to power as more than just a principle
that yields insight into the deep psychological motivations of human beings. For
instance, in "Thus Spoke Zarathustra" he has Zarathustra say: “Wherever I found
a living thing, I found there the will to power.” Here the will to power is applied to
the biological realm. And in a fairly straightforward sense, one might understand
a simple event such as a big fish eating a little fish as a form of the will to power;
the big fish demonstrates mastery of its environment by assimilating part of the
environment into itself.

The Will to Power as a Metaphysical Principle


Nietzsche contemplated writing a book entitled “The Will to Power” but never
published a book under this name. After his death, however, his sister Elizabeth
published a collection of his unpublished notes, organized and edited by herself,
entitled "The Will to Power." Nietzsche re-visits his philosophy of eternal
recurrence in "The Will to Power," an idea proposed earlier in "The Gay
Science." 
Some sections of this book make it clear that Nietzsche took seriously the idea
that the will to power might be a fundamental principle operating throughout the
cosmos. Section 1067, the last section of the book, sums up Nietzsche’s way of
thinking about the world as “a monster of energy, without beginning, without
end...my Dionysian world of the eternally self-creating, the eternally self-
destroying…” It concludes:
“Do you want a name for this world? A solution for all its riddles? A light for you, too, you best-
concealed, strongest, most intrepid, most midnightly men?––This world is the will to power––
and nothing besides! And you yourselves are also this will to power––and nothing besides!”

https://www.thoughtco.com/nietzsches-concept-of-the-will-to-power-2670658

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